Medea Summary

"Medea" by Euripides is a play that was written and performed in 431 B.C. It is based on the Greek myth of Medea and Jason. When Jason betrays Medea by marrying a Corinthian princess, Medea plots and enacts her revenge, destroying everyone her husband holds dear. "Medea" is an interesting, yet controversial, version of the popular Greek myth sure to thrill and appall modern audiences.

Medea Study Guide

Encyclopedia Articles (1)

Medea
by Euripides
Euripides (485-406 B.C.) is regarded as one of the greatest of classical tragedians. Creator of more than ninety plays (although less than twenty are available in complete form),...
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Euripides Biographies (3)

Euripides (480-406 BC) was a Greek playwright whom Aristotle called the most tragic of the Greek poets. He is certainly the most revolutionary Greek tragedian known in modern times.Euripides was the s...
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Of the three poets of Greek tragedy whose work survives, Euripides is the one whose plays survive in the largest number (eighteen, in contrast to seven each for Aeschylus and Sophocles). His plays are...
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Biography EssayOf the three poets of Greek tragedy whose work survives, Euripides is the one whose plays survive in the largest number (eighteen in contrast to seven each for Aeschylus and Sophocles)....
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Essays & Analysis (10)

In The Great Mother, Erich Neumann attempts to provide a structural analysis of the archetype. He states in the preface that not only does it "provide the foundation for all psychotherapy," it also p...
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Medea, a main character from Euripides's Medea, is a passionate, prideful woman who has conflicts in her relationships with people. However, Medea's true conflicts lie within her, concerning how her ...
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How we as humans always find a way to create conflict, is beyond me. It seems that conflict is inevitable, whether it's with yourself, or someone else, but it is comforting to realize that it has bee...
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Euripide's Medea is a play about revenge and justice which i had a strong negative response to. Medea has been cheated on and banished from her home in Corinth. She has been hurt very badly, and seeks...
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Euripides portrayal of women in his plays has been somewhat bizarre. His female characters kill out of revenge, kill out of jealousy and kill because a god possessed them too. In Alcestis and Andromac...
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Guilt is defined as remorseful awareness of having done something wrong (Dorset and Barber, Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, 809). In Euripides's Medea, the fact that Medea is a mother who clearly ca...
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The scenes of violence in Euripides play "Medea" contributes greatly to the overall meaning of the work. During the era of the ancient Greeks, women were oppressed and forced to be subordinate to men,...
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In classic Greek culture, there was no greater experience as a human than to attend a tragic play, sharing in the universal sufferings of mankind with the audience, having that moment of catharsis whe...
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In Medea an essential character is the chorus of Corinthian women. They help obtain Euripides' truly genius paradox of achieving empathy from the readers for a mother who sheds her own children's blo...
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Derrick Martin
Paper #2 11/22/05
Prof. Anderson
A33320865
Messenger A nalysis
The messenger in Euripides' play The Medea plays and essential role. The messenger in the play is a slave of the r...
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